[3]They are not the messy that we are. even the japanese protests are organized. well, sorry for my opinion, it could be little aggressive - but thanks for the video, i agree with lots of things.
[2]they are dealing with it the way they think it´s better. i´m not better than the japanese govern, and i don´t know about japanese people and culture as the government knows- so let´s let the government do their job. and don´t tell japanese people to question their teacher, or education, or parents~ it´s another culture, they have other concepts of respect and whatever.
@dtrcoelho The point is that it's part of a larger system of downplaying and opinion control of a major disaster that needs more transparency to see us through with minimal health damage. I've lived in Japan for years and speak Japanese, so I have every right to be concerned with the issue and have valid views on it. The Japanese government is not God and do not know best. They have interests that do not always put the safety of the population first.
[1] i really like your material. but actually i didn´t get the point. Maybe you are being a little bit harsh with junior high school education. it´s a first contact to this topic, they might learn the disadvantages of radiativity when they enter the high school (it´s their system, and if it works for them, ok - you also had your system of education). i don´t blame the government to calm down the population in that situation, actually they´ve already had radiative problems in the past.
@RACINGWILDONE I don't recall talking about radionuclide in this video, but it's a given that the fuel (Uranium and Plutonium), in addition to the fission and subsequent decay products are out in the environment.
That was very interesting when you were talking about lantern mantles. does that include old mantles or new ones ? I have a collection of antique lanterns, and many boxes of original antique mantles. I havn't really handled them much, I usually use my old oil lanterns. I like the warm glow they give off. I can't help but feel sorry for the children of Japan, the same way I lost respect for the adults of Japan. They used to have honor, but where is the honor in killing there children.
Good job Will, I feel I should leave you with a tasteless joke, but I just finished going through all my updates, and to tell you the truth, I just don't have it in me anymore. The news coming out of Japan is so riddled with lies, it just made me so dam depressed, that for the first time in a very long time. I'm speachless. Take care my old friend, and stay safe.
@RACINGWILDONE Yeah, I'm exhausted from it all. One of the reasons I've been slow on getting around to my next video. The thing is I think the Japanese are getting tired of it too, but in a way where they are reacting less and less. I'm sadly starting to feel that way, but know I mustn't.
I suppose the government thought that letting school children measure the radiation levens in their environment would be a good way to cheaply crowd source a nation wide testing of the situation.
If the issue of energy is responsible for this then it is unlikely that any action will move forward in time. I understood that the Japanese area is on the ring of fire. Several "natural" issues create additional risk. The refusal to evacuate may have something to do with their need to quietly deal with those issues prior to creating a scare and to place resources where they are most needed. My information is that the meridian plate is dissolving and some action will have to be taken.
@radiutube You ask BIG questions. I recommend watching my first video where I discuss Hiroshima and Nagasaki (/watch?v=qvVu5riBNt4) Hiroshima and Nagasaki are well remembered, but only as symbols of how horrible war is. Students learn few details other than that they happened. Japanese docileness probably evolved from the strict social hierarchies established in feudal times. Japan is still a "vertical" society and to challenge authority or group consensus is a no-no here.
Excellent, thanks for investigating and posting. I also heard about how the text books discussing reactors had to be rewritten. I had a hunch brainwashing was involved. If my husband were not opposed, I would be homeschooling. By the way, I decided against the 6th grade trip to Nikko after reviewing their activities. Hiking up a mountain where "they will get very muddy so we need to send them w/ extra shoes" and visiting a farm where the will eat fresh soft cream.
@sakuramane2004 Yeah, that sounds like an active effort to contaminate the children >_<. I think that sounds like the best decision. WFT are they thinking trying to do business as usual in a nuclear disaster?!?!
Awesome expose! What's puzzling to me is anti-safety advocates saying the invisibility of radiation causes people to fear it. As if being able to see, in a contaminated zone, thousands of subatomic bullets shooting through your body tearing up cellular strucutre and DNA strands would lead people to believe radiation is safe. Nothing the anti-safety advocates say makes any sense when you stop and think about it.
its Brainwashing not science, if it was science it would show some kind of balance and this thing being put forward in the schools is pandering to the nuclear industry, very sad ..but we've come to expect that from Japan nowadays.
Japan is responsible for new English idioms:"Obfukuscation" as a pun on obfuscation. "The Tepco Obfukuscationists should be prosecuted for intentionally endangering the lives of people around the world"
@kampaikampaikampai Nicola Tesla's dream was wireless energy and his legacy is the very interesting Tesla coil. The seemingly alive electrical arcs that come out of a Tesla coil have created a kind of image and mythology around the man. But I don't truly believe that him or anyone else has really created a technology, other than bombs set off along faults, that can trigger focused earthquake. Fukushima was an unfortunate confluence of an act of nature and man's lack of foresight.
@AluminumStudios & @kampaikampai : If you havent researched it already i think you would both find the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program also known as HAARP very interesting.
And yeah. "The filmmakers knew about the nuclear tests[4] but the federal government reassured residents that the tests caused no hazard to public health.[7]" -Wikipedia entry
You might want to research what happened to the cast of the 1956 movie "The Conqueror". Their fate Includes the cancer death of the famous lead actor, John Wayne and the director Dick Powell. The cast and crew totaled 220 people. By 1981, 91 of them had developed some form of cancer and 46 had died of the disease.
You might want to research what happened to the cast of the 1956 movie "The Conqueror". Their fate Includes the cancer death of the famous lead actor, John Wayne and the director Dick Powell. The cast and crew totaled 220 people. By 1981, 91 of them had developed some form of cancer and 46 had died of the disease.
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[3]They are not the messy that we are. even the japanese protests are organized. well, sorry for my opinion, it could be little aggressive - but thanks for the video, i agree with lots of things.
dtrcoelho 1 week ago
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[2]they are dealing with it the way they think it´s better. i´m not better than the japanese govern, and i don´t know about japanese people and culture as the government knows- so let´s let the government do their job. and don´t tell japanese people to question their teacher, or education, or parents~ it´s another culture, they have other concepts of respect and whatever.
dtrcoelho 1 week ago
@dtrcoelho The point is that it's part of a larger system of downplaying and opinion control of a major disaster that needs more transparency to see us through with minimal health damage. I've lived in Japan for years and speak Japanese, so I have every right to be concerned with the issue and have valid views on it. The Japanese government is not God and do not know best. They have interests that do not always put the safety of the population first.
AluminumStudios 1 week ago
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[1] i really like your material. but actually i didn´t get the point. Maybe you are being a little bit harsh with junior high school education. it´s a first contact to this topic, they might learn the disadvantages of radiativity when they enter the high school (it´s their system, and if it works for them, ok - you also had your system of education). i don´t blame the government to calm down the population in that situation, actually they´ve already had radiative problems in the past.
dtrcoelho 1 week ago
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dtrcoelho 1 week ago
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dtrcoelho 1 week ago
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dtrcoelho 1 week ago
I also notice you don't mention Plutonium, or uranium, which are both being dispersed from Fukushima, for almost a year now.
RACINGWILDONE 1 month ago
@RACINGWILDONE I don't recall talking about radionuclide in this video, but it's a given that the fuel (Uranium and Plutonium), in addition to the fission and subsequent decay products are out in the environment.
AluminumStudios 1 month ago
That was very interesting when you were talking about lantern mantles. does that include old mantles or new ones ? I have a collection of antique lanterns, and many boxes of original antique mantles. I havn't really handled them much, I usually use my old oil lanterns. I like the warm glow they give off. I can't help but feel sorry for the children of Japan, the same way I lost respect for the adults of Japan. They used to have honor, but where is the honor in killing there children.
RACINGWILDONE 1 month ago
@RACINGWILDONE Old ones in most of the world, but in Japan they still sell the radioactive kind. Please watch this video: watch?v=VhE8-5g39SQ
AluminumStudios 1 month ago
Good job Will, I feel I should leave you with a tasteless joke, but I just finished going through all my updates, and to tell you the truth, I just don't have it in me anymore. The news coming out of Japan is so riddled with lies, it just made me so dam depressed, that for the first time in a very long time. I'm speachless. Take care my old friend, and stay safe.
RACINGWILDONE 1 month ago
@RACINGWILDONE Yeah, I'm exhausted from it all. One of the reasons I've been slow on getting around to my next video. The thing is I think the Japanese are getting tired of it too, but in a way where they are reacting less and less. I'm sadly starting to feel that way, but know I mustn't.
AluminumStudios 1 month ago
I suppose the government thought that letting school children measure the radiation levens in their environment would be a good way to cheaply crowd source a nation wide testing of the situation.
lordmetroid 1 month ago in playlist More videos from AluminumStudios
If the issue of energy is responsible for this then it is unlikely that any action will move forward in time. I understood that the Japanese area is on the ring of fire. Several "natural" issues create additional risk. The refusal to evacuate may have something to do with their need to quietly deal with those issues prior to creating a scare and to place resources where they are most needed. My information is that the meridian plate is dissolving and some action will have to be taken.
AnneFox7 2 months ago
Comment removed
mdzack2000 3 months ago
It seems strange that Japan of all nations denies the danger of nuclear radiation.
Is their history with Hiroshima and Nagasaki (radiation sickness) equally played down in schools?
also, is being 'docile' a typical Japanese trade or did this develop after their defeat after WW2?
radiutube 4 months ago
@radiutube You ask BIG questions. I recommend watching my first video where I discuss Hiroshima and Nagasaki (/watch?v=qvVu5riBNt4) Hiroshima and Nagasaki are well remembered, but only as symbols of how horrible war is. Students learn few details other than that they happened. Japanese docileness probably evolved from the strict social hierarchies established in feudal times. Japan is still a "vertical" society and to challenge authority or group consensus is a no-no here.
AluminumStudios 4 months ago
@radiutube maby the godzilla movies gave them the impression that radiation was "super"whatever.....
SHARKREEF2011 3 months ago
Excellent, thanks for investigating and posting. I also heard about how the text books discussing reactors had to be rewritten. I had a hunch brainwashing was involved. If my husband were not opposed, I would be homeschooling. By the way, I decided against the 6th grade trip to Nikko after reviewing their activities. Hiking up a mountain where "they will get very muddy so we need to send them w/ extra shoes" and visiting a farm where the will eat fresh soft cream.
sakuramane2004 5 months ago
@sakuramane2004 Yeah, that sounds like an active effort to contaminate the children >_<. I think that sounds like the best decision. WFT are they thinking trying to do business as usual in a nuclear disaster?!?!
AluminumStudios 5 months ago
Awesome expose! What's puzzling to me is anti-safety advocates saying the invisibility of radiation causes people to fear it. As if being able to see, in a contaminated zone, thousands of subatomic bullets shooting through your body tearing up cellular strucutre and DNA strands would lead people to believe radiation is safe. Nothing the anti-safety advocates say makes any sense when you stop and think about it.
iamgoddard 5 months ago 3
its Brainwashing not science, if it was science it would show some kind of balance and this thing being put forward in the schools is pandering to the nuclear industry, very sad ..but we've come to expect that from Japan nowadays.
LondonLanguageLounge 5 months ago 2
Japan is responsible for new English idioms:"Obfukuscation" as a pun on obfuscation. "The Tepco Obfukuscationists should be prosecuted for intentionally endangering the lives of people around the world"
IExposeMormonism 5 months ago
Thank you William. Always learning from you.
aristoman007 5 months ago
Good work as usual!
AustralianCannonball 5 months ago
Thank you for this. Thank you for such a sound and reasonable argument that anyone can understand.
Bioritize 5 months ago
ty for this video... have you checked enenews? good intel... many sources.
rayclay2 5 months ago
@rayclay2 Yes, despite being a tiny bit sensationalist at times, it is a very good source of information, along with ex-skf.
AluminumStudios 5 months ago
Comment removed
kampaikampaikampai 5 months ago
@kampaikampaikampai Nicola Tesla's dream was wireless energy and his legacy is the very interesting Tesla coil. The seemingly alive electrical arcs that come out of a Tesla coil have created a kind of image and mythology around the man. But I don't truly believe that him or anyone else has really created a technology, other than bombs set off along faults, that can trigger focused earthquake. Fukushima was an unfortunate confluence of an act of nature and man's lack of foresight.
AluminumStudios 5 months ago
@AluminumStudios & @kampaikampai : If you havent researched it already i think you would both find the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program also known as HAARP very interesting.
JG1635 5 months ago
Comment removed
kampaikampaikampai 5 months ago
Also, yeah... thats total brain washing.
BadMadChicken 5 months ago
Thank you. Thank you so much for this.
BadMadChicken 5 months ago
Excellent work. I hope a lot of japanese people can see that. Thanks.
We try to relay that in France too :-)
Pascalf49 5 months ago
GREAT important work
kevindblanch 5 months ago
thanks for those precious informations
CrisUbermann 5 months ago
And yeah. "The filmmakers knew about the nuclear tests[4] but the federal government reassured residents that the tests caused no hazard to public health.[7]" -Wikipedia entry
astrotometry 5 months ago
You might want to research what happened to the cast of the 1956 movie "The Conqueror". Their fate Includes the cancer death of the famous lead actor, John Wayne and the director Dick Powell. The cast and crew totaled 220 people. By 1981, 91 of them had developed some form of cancer and 46 had died of the disease.
astrotometry 5 months ago
You might want to research what happened to the cast of the 1956 movie "The Conqueror". Their fate Includes the cancer death of the famous lead actor, John Wayne and the director Dick Powell. The cast and crew totaled 220 people. By 1981, 91 of them had developed some form of cancer and 46 had died of the disease.
astrotometry 5 months ago